Bio: ROBERT W. BURCHELL is chair of the Program of Planning and Policy Development in the Edward J. Bloustein School at Rutgers University. He is also a distinguished professor and co-director of the Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University.
Education: Ph.D. Rutgers University, 1971 MCRP Rutgers University, 1969 BSME U.S. Coast Guard Academy, 1963
Key Publications: Dr. Burchell is the author of 30 books and more than 50 peer-reviewed articles. Professor Burchell is an expert on fiscal impact analysis, land-use development and regulation, and housing policy. Dr. Burchell co-authored the Development Impact Assessment Handbook for ULI-The Urban Land Institute. His major publications include The Fiscal Impact Handbook, The New Practitioner's Guide to Fiscal Impact Analysis, The Adaptive Reuse Handbook, and the Environmental Impact Handbook. Dr. Burchell's seminal work in the area of development patterns and infrastructure costs is a nationally recognized research project for the National Academy of Sciences and the Transportation Cooperative Research Program resulting in The Costs of Sprawl Revisited and The Costs of Sprawl-2000. He has just completed a work on the Transportation Costs of New Development for the National Academy of Sciences and the National Cooperative Highway Research Program.
Other Publications: Robert W. Burchell, Ph.D. has served as principal investigator on more than $10 million in research spanning a forty-year career at Rutgers. One of these efforts involved calculating affordable housing need for all of the communities in New Jersey under the Mount Laurel mandate. This effort produced studies in 1987, 1993, 1999, and 2009. Another of these efforts concerned the Impact Assessment of the New Jersey State Development and Redevelopment Plan, an encompassing study of the growth management program adopted by the New Jersey State Planning Commission in June 1992. This impact assessment was done in 1992 and repeated in 2001 and 2010; in all three cases the assessment was a requirement for passage of the New Jersey State Plan. Similar "costs of sprawl" studies have been done for the state of Maryland, the Lexington (KY) Metropolitan Area, the Delaware Estuary, the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, the South Carolina Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations and the two Regional Planning Commissions of South Florida.
Past Assignments: Robert W. Burchell has been an invited speaker at the annual conferences of APA, RMLUI, G&IC, and Center for American and International Law for the last several years and, in some cases, for more than a decade.
Bio: Director of the Center for Green Building, Professor of Urban Planning and Policy Development, and Associate Dean for Planning and New Initiatives at the E.J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ. Taught previously at Princeton University, prior to that worked as a design engineer and technology assessor in San Francisco, Boston, and Washington, DC.
Education: Brown University, Sc.B. with Honors, Urban/Mechanical Engineering, 1978. MIT, S.M., Technology & Policy, 1985, Sigma Xi. MIT, Ph.D., Regional Planning, 1990.
Key Publications: Andrews, Clinton J., Jennifer A. Senick, Richard E. Wener, “Incorporating occupant perceptions and behavior into BIM,” chapter 20 (pp. 234-46) in Shauna Mallory-Hill, Wolfgang F.E. Preiser & Chris Watson, eds., Enhancing Building Performance, Oxford: Blackwell, 2012. Clinton Andrews, Daniel Yi, Uta Krogmann, Jennifer Senick, and Richard Wener, “Designing Buildings for Real Occupants: An Agent-Based Approach,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics--Part A: Systems and Humans November 2011, 41(6): 1077-1091. Clinton Andrews and David DeVault, “Green Niche Market Development: A Model with Heterogeneous Agents,” Journal of Industrial Ecology April 2009, 13(2): 326-345. Clinton Andrews and Uta Krogmann, “Technology diffusion and energy intensity in U.S. commercial buildings,” Energy Policy 37(2009): 541–553. Clinton Andrews and Uta Krogmann, “Explaining the adoption of energy-efficient technologies in U.S. commercial buildings,” Energy and Buildings 41 (2009): 287–294. Clinton J. Andrews, "Energy conversion goes local: Implications for planners," Journal of the American Planning Association Spring 2008, 74(2):231-254. Clinton J. Andrews, “Greenhouse gas emissions along the rural to urban gradient,” Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, November 2008, 51(6): 1–20. Clinton J. Andrews, Henry C. Jonas, Nancy Mantell & Randall S. Solomon, “Deliberating on statewide energy targets,” Journal of Planning Education and Research, Summer 2008, 28(1): 6–20. Uta Krogmann, Clinton J. Andrews, Mookhan Kim, Gregory Kiss, and Clare Miflin, “Water mass balances for the Solaire and the 2020 Tower: Implications for closing the water loop in high-rise buildings,” Journal of the American Water Resources Association, December 2007, 43(6): 1414–23. Clinton J. Andrews, “Formulating and implementing public policy for new energy carriers,” Proceedings of the IEEE (2006) 94(10): 1852-1863. Clinton J. Andrews, “National responses to energy vulnerability,” IEEE Technology and Society 25 (3): 16-25. 2006.
Other Publications: Clinton J. Andrews, Lisa Dewey-Mattia, Judd Schechtman, and Mathias Mayr, “Alternative energy sources and land use,” in G. Ingram & H. Hong, eds., Climate Change, Energy Use, and Land Policies, Cambridge, MA: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 2011. Frank Felder, Clinton J. Andrews, and Seth Hulkower, “Which energy future? Scenarios for the global energy sector,” in F. Sioshansi, ed., What energy future? Sustainable lifestyle on a finite planet, Dordrecht: Elsevier, 2011. Clinton J. Andrews, Humble Analysis: The Practice of Joint Fact Finding. Westport CT: Praeger, 2002, 200 pp. Clinton J. Andrews, editor, Regulating Regional Power Systems. Westport CT: Quorum Books (paperback edition also released by IEEE Press, New York), 1995, 405 pp. Robert H. Socolow, Clinton J. Andrews, Frans Berkhout and Valerie M. Thomas, editors, Industrial Ecology and Global Change, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994, 500 pp.
Past Assignments: 2012.11.14 "Improving Buildings through Simulation of Occupant Behavior," GreenBuild2012, San Francisco, CA. 2012.7.17 “How User-Friendly Are Green Buildings?,” Net-Zero House Symposium, Das Haus, White Plains, NY. 2012.6.26 “Evaluating a Green Luxury Rental High-Rise Apartment Building in NYC,” International Association of People-Environment Studies annual conference, Glasgow, Scotland. 2011.05.24 "Does Fukushima Significantly Increase the Nuclear Footprint?" plenary, IEEE International Symposium on Technology & Society, Chicago, IL. 2010.10.09 "Green Building in Europe," Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning annual conference, Minneapolis, MN. 2010.05.29, “Alternative energy and land use,” commissioned lecture at annual conference, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Cambridge, MA. 2010.05.17, “Designing buildings for real occupants: An agent-based approach,” Center for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, London, UK. 2009.11.16 “Roles for Green Buildings in Solving Global Warming,” sponsored lecture, School of Energy and Environment, Southeast University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China. 2009.6.17 “Productivity and IEQ,” GreenBuildingsNY Conference, New York, NY 2009.5.18 “Are smarter buildings better buildings?,” IEEE International Symposium on Technology and Society, Tempe, AZ. 2008.10.13 “Joint fact-finding,” plenary lecture, International Council for the Exploration of the Sea Meeting, Copenhagen, Denmark. 2008.1.25 “Infrastructure factors related to urban health,” Workshop on a Systems Analysis Approach to Health and Wellbeing in the Urban Environment, International Council on Science (ICSU) in collaboration with International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Vienna, Austria. 2007.4.7 "Envisioning New Jersey's Energy Future: What Stakeholders Want," keynote, GLOBALCON, Atlantic City, NJ.